Elizabeth Clarke

Let’s Treat Juveniles in Detention at Least as Well as Animals in Zoo

Prisons, or concrete cages, are outdated concepts for animals. Our zoos have turned animal enclosures into humane reproductions of their natural home environment. Yet our detention centers/prisons remain cold, cruel and inhospitable for adults, let alone children.

Report: Certainty, Not Severity, Key in Deterring Juvenile Crime

Edward Mulvey, the principal investigator on the study, said the idea that adolescents respond to the certainty of punishment, not severity, has found an audience with some policymakers. They are asking whether states should have to justify why the criminal justice system should hold an adolescent offender for a long time.

Louisiana: smiling woman with shoulder-length light brown hair, black jacket, blue top

Juvenile Law Center Looks Back on 40 Years of Achievement

Bolstered by the heady optimism of the civil rights movement, coupled with the end of the Vietnam War, the Juvenile Law Center quickly became one of the only firms in the United States to represent society’s most vulnerable.

Chad Posick

A Biosocial Explanation for Running from Police

Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man from Baltimore, made eye contact with a police officer and, at that moment, decided to run. There was seemingly little reason he would choose to do so, as he wasn’t doing anything wrong. Tragically, Gray died in police custody when he was being transported to a police station. Walter Scott, an older man from South Carolina, also ran from police officers after a traffic stop. He had a warrant out for his arrest, which might partly explain his fleeing the scene.